Mr. Lucky Read Online Free

Mr. Lucky
Book: Mr. Lucky Read Online Free
Author: James Swain
Pages:
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The camera did a close-up on his face.
    “Don’t show it,” Valentine said to the screen.
    The man on the balcony hesitated. There was a courage in his eyes that you didn’t see very often. The look of someone who’s accepted his fate. He opened his mouth.
    “I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country,” he yelled at the camera.
    Then he jumped.

3
    M ax Duncan, a twenty-eight-year-old blackjack dealer, watched the first fire trucks pull in front of the Riverboat Casino across the street. More trucks followed, along with dozens of wailing police cruisers.
The joint must be on fire,
he thought.
    Max wanted to go to the windows and have a look; only, house rules forbid him from leaving his table. There was a famous story about a dealer who left his post to help a man having a stroke and was fired on the spot.
    The pit boss hurried past Max’s table. He was a tough nut named Harry. Every day before the shift started, Harry made the dealers assemble in the employee lounge and on an easel wrote a single word in giant letters: WIN .
    After a minute Harry returned, his face cast in stone. Max tried to get his attention.
    “Harry, what’s going on?”
    “Deal your game,” Harry snapped at him.
    Harry made it sound like a threat. He made everything sound like a threat. Max looked at the elderly woman sitting at his table. Her name was Helen, and she was a retired bookkeeper. Helen had won the first bet she’d made a few hours ago, and allowed the memory to take up permanent residence in her imagination.
    “Place your bets,” Max said. “You know what they say. You can’t win if you don’t play.”
    “You can’t
lose,
either,” she replied testily. The cards had punished her since her first win, but she’d hung tight and almost pulled even. She placed a green twenty-five-dollar chip in the betting circle.
    “Be nice,” she said as Max dealt.
    Her two cards totaled sixteen. Helen had a stiff, the worst hand possible. She slapped the table hard.
    “Now, now,” Max said. “Be kind to the furniture.”
    More fire trucks raced past the casino. Someone opened one of the front doors, and the trucks’ wail filled the interior like a chorus of screaming cats. A chip girl walked past the table, and Max caught her eye. “What’s going on?” he asked under his breath.
    “There’s a fire over at the Riverboat.”
    “Is it bad?”
    “People are jumping from the balconies.”
    “Jesus,” he swore under his breath.
    “Hit me,” Helen said.
    Max looked at her. She’d heard everything the chip girl had said.
    “Come on, lady,” he said testily. “Show some respect. People across the street are dying.”
    “It’s no surprise,” she said, talking in a loud voice. “The owners rushed to make their grand opening. A lot of palms got greased to get the building up to code. Now, hit me.”
    Max dealt her a four, giving her a twenty.
    “Was that so hard?” she cackled, her foul mood vanishing.
    Helen had started the evening with five hundred dollars, dropped to twenty, and was now slightly ahead. Max wanted to tell her to go home, but the rules prohibited it. He watched her slide all her chips into the betting circle.
    “Let it ride,” she said.
    The table limit was five hundred. Max called the pit boss. As Harry approached the table, Max said, “Lady wants to bet the kaiser roll.”
    “She counting?” Harry asked.
    “Naw.”
    “Let her.”
    The other blackjack tables were clearing out, the players going to the windows or walking outside to watch the fire. Helen ignored their departure, her eyes fixed on the plastic shoe as if the next card to be dealt contained the secret to the universe.
    Max dealt the round. They both had twenty. A push. It seemed sinful to be gambling while people were dying; only, Helen didn’t see it that way, her mouth working a two-hour-old piece of gum like a piece of cud.
    Max dealt another round. This time, Helen had twenty, while he had sixteen. He drew a
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